City, county cooperation not new.
Judd, Dennis R.
In my last column, I talked about the numerous attempts to achieve
metropolitan reform in the St. Louis metropolitan area. St. Louis long
ago became famous not only for its political fragmentation, but also for
how many times reform failed--1926, 1959, 1961, 1989, 1990. Over the
years, this record of failure has provided plenty of fodder for urban
scholars and for the press.
It may come as a surprise therefore that St. Louis actually has a
record of some success in achieving metropolitan governance. These
successes have generally escaped attention because most people focus
upon the attempts to achieve a comprehensive consolidation of
governments in the metropolitan area. But the many smaller, less
spectacular achievements are worthy of note.
One significant example is St. Louis County, which has undergone
fundamental governmental reform since World II. In a referendum in March
1950, St. Louis County voters approved a "home rule" charter
for the county. That charter brought into existence the basics of its
current governmental structure, with an elected county executive, 11
departments, and a seven-member council. The previous government had
become inadequate in a county that was urbanized at lightning speed,
with the number of municipalities rocketing from 41 in 1940 to 84 by
1950. The county's government consisted of a three-member county
court that adopted a budget, determined tax rates and legislated basic
policy, plus a plethora of elected officials who presided over their own
very independent patronage systems. Courthouse politics was byzantine
and corrupt.
The new charter adopted in 1950 allowed the county to begin
providing necessary urban services and regulations. The process had
started even before charter reform, but fitfully. The county had already
adopted subdivision regulations and a comprehensive zoning ordinance for
the unincorporated areas. After reform, the county adopted a building
code, and it gradually began to provide a full range of services in
unincorporated areas and to contract services with the multitude of tiny
municipalities that had sprung up in the 1940s, many without adequate
tax bases or administrative structures. The county, in addition, built a
system of parks (32 county parks by 1964) and a county library system.
Not wanting to jeopardize their proposal, those who had drawn up
the charter in 1950 kept the multitude of elected offices and their
patronage systems. But over time, these were lopped off, one by one. In
1954, following a shooting incident between two county deputy sheriffs,
county voters approved a referendum to replace the sheriff's office
with the Saint Louis County Department of Police. (Over time, this would
evolve into coordinated police standards, training and dispatching
services, and the 911 emergency system.) Following a scandal over
mixed-up tax bills, the assessor and collector of revenue fell next. In
1966 the highway engineer became an appointed office. Later, in 1968,
voters approved a more comprehensive amendment to the charter, this time
eliminating most of the elected administrative officials, the
prosecuting attorney, and replaced them with appointed officials. In
1970, voters again supported a significant reform, this time approving a
constitutional amendment allowing a referendum procedure, whereby a
majority of the county's voters could, if they wished, vote to
transfer municipal services to the county.
There have also been significant examples--believe it or not--of
city-county cooperation. A far-reaching consolidation of services
involving both the city and the county occurred in 1954 with the
creation of the Metropolitan Saint Louis Sewer District. This reform was
borne out of equal measures of desperation and disgust. By the
mid-1940s, there were 42 special districts in St. Louis County supplying
sewer, drainage, water and fire protection. Many of the sewer districts
had completely inadequate facilities that allowed brown water and
sometimes raw sewage to be regularly spilled. Parts of the county had no
sewers at all, but still relied on cesspools. New subdivisions regularly
overloaded existing systems. The sewer district showed that
comprehensive city-county reform was palatable, if the motivation was
high enough.
The Zoo-Museum District provides another example of successful
metropolitan reform in the St. Louis area. By the late 1960s the St.
Louis Zoo was in trouble. The five cents in property tax it got from the
city of St. Louis wasn't nearly enough to keep up the escalating
costs of a modern zoo.
Howard Baer, the president of the St. Louis Zoo Board, worked with
the St. Louis Art Museum to persuade the Missouri legislature to
authorize a Zoo-Museum District.
A tax proposal was put on the ballot for the April 6, 1971,
election, to allocate four cents of property tax for the zoo and the
arts museum and up to one cent for the Museum of Science and Natural
History. It passed easily in the city and narrowly in the county, but
even a narrow victory demonstrated that county residents were willing to
pony up for something of regional value.
In the early 1980s, the Missouri legislature agreed to raise the
maximum tax for the Zoo-Art Museum District from four cents to eight
cents, and for the Museum of Science and Natural History from one cent
to six cents. The legislature also added the Missouri Botanical Garden to the list, authorizing it to seek up to four cents per $100 valuation,
if the voters approved. It didn't take long for leaders in the city
and county to get a tax increase on the ballot. And in April 1983,
voters in both the city and the county did approve a doubling of the
rate for the zoo and art museum (to eight cents), approved increasing
the Museum of Science's takes from one to four cents, and they
approved the same tax rate for the Garden.
Once again, the vote was close in the county, but a majority of
county voters was, once again, willing to show that they had, at least
to some degree, a regional perspective.
There are two other notable examples showing that voters in St.
Louis County are capable of a regional perspective. Years ago, county
voters agreed to a 3.75 percent tax to support the Convention and
Visitors' Commission and the Regional Arts Commission. In April
1990, voters in the county approved an additional 3.75 percent tax
increase for the TWA Dome--by a two-to-one margin. The more than $6
million thus raised was more than enough to provide the county's $6
million share of the stadium's bond issue.
The next test of the county voters' regional attitudes will
come soon. A proposal is being floated to ask city and county voters to
support downtown development by taxing themselves again. Do voters in
the county actually identify with St. Louis' downtown enough to tax
themselves for it? Do they consider it a cultural treasure akin to the
zoo and art museum or a sports stadium?
If you want to find some answers to questions such as these, you
should consult the excellent sources I pirated for this information. Jon
Teaford's book, "Post-Suburbia" (Johns Hopkins Press,
1997), contains a wealth of information about metropolitan reform in St.
Louis. An even more detailed and marvelously written book will soon be
available. Later this spring my colleague, E. Terrence Jones, will
publish "A Mosaic of Governments: Why St. Louis Has So Many,"
through a new St. Louis publishing house, Palmerton and Reed. It will
appear as the first book in a series on St. Louis and Missouri issues.
St. Louis has needed a press like this for some time. You should be sure
to buy a copy of Terry's book when it appears. It provides a truly
unique perspective on the little-known history of metropolitan St.
Dennis Judd is professor of political science at University of
Missouri-St. Louis.